People v. Caldwell

203 P. 440, 55 Cal. App. 280, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 36
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 22, 1921
DocketCrim. No. 817.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 203 P. 440 (People v. Caldwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Caldwell, 203 P. 440, 55 Cal. App. 280, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 36 (Cal. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

WORKS, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of conviction of rape, from an order denying appellant’s motion for a new trial, and from an order denying his *282 motion for' an arrest of judgment. [1] The latter order is not appealable.

The information charged that the rape was committed with force and violence and also that the prosecutrix was under the age of eighteen years, that being the age of consent to sexual intercourse. Appellant was of the age of twenty years. The facts show that a party of six, including the prosecutrix, the appellant, two other boys, and two other girls, drove in an automobile to a park in the country in the latter part of the afternoon. The prosecutrix and appellant separated themselves from the other four. As evening approached, the four, desiring to return home, made search for the missing couple, but did not find them and finally started home without them. They went to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Smith, father and mother of one of the two girls, where they told the girl’s parents that they had been unable to find appellant and the prosecutrix and had left them in the park. Smith then asked the two boys to accompany him on a search for the missing pair, and they did so, going in the car in which the young people had just returned, one of the boys driving it. The car, at some distance short of the park, met appellant and the prosecutrix walking beside each other along the road. They were taken into the vehicle and the entire party returned to the Smith home. Mrs. Smith questioned the prosecutrix soon afterward and elicited from her a statement that appellant had violated her while they were in the park. The prosecutrix is an adopted child, and her adoptive father was called to take her to the family home, some blocks away. Appellant was put under arrest for the alleged crime that evening.

Appellant contends for a reversal of the judgment on the ground of the conduct of the trial judge in making the following' statement while a witness for the defense, one of the boys who drove back to the park with the other boy and with Mr. Smith, was on the stand: “Well, I do not usually desire to interpose the court’s own objection, but you are not establishing a thing, you are not asking a material question and all you are doing with these three last witnesses is to corroborate what was said by the plaintiff’s witnesses. Now, you must have some purpose in that, because you certainly know you are not getting *283 anywhere with your evidence, if you have got any witnesses that know anything that will contradict any witness brought or anyone that knows anything material, call the witness.” These remarks met with no protest from appellant’s counsel, but the district attorney at once attracted additional attention to the attitude of the court by saying, “I don’t know whether the court thinks that the prosecuting office is negligent, but I can’t object when it is fjavorable to the prosecution, for that reason I did not object.”

Notwithstanding the failure of appellant to take exception to the judge’s statement, by that means giving him the opportunity to withdraw it and to admonish the jury to disregard it, we feel called upon to consider minutely the point presented. In doing so it will be necessary to take a view of portions of the evidence. If such a view shall disclose that counsel for appellant were “not establishing a thing,” that they were “not asking a material question,” that all they were doing with their “three last witnesses” was to “corroborate what was said by the plaintiff’s witnesses,” that they must have had “some purpose in that because” they certainly knew they were not “getting anywhere” with their evidence, and that the judge was justified in saying, “If you have got any witnesses that know anything that will contradict any witness brought or any one that knows anything material, call the witness”: if, we say, these things shall appear, then appellant’s contention is at an end, except for some considerations which we shall mention below, for the language employed by the court will have been shown to be harmless upon that score. On the other hand, if the things mentioned, or some of them, shall not appear from a review of the evidence, then we can discern a great injury resulting to the defense and therefore to the rights of appellant.

There were but five witnesses for the defense, called in the following order: A physician, who testified as an expert; the prosecutrix; the two boys who were of the party which went to the park and who returned there with Smith on the search for the missing pair; and the defendant himself. The three witnesses referred to in the statement of the judge to which exception is taken were the prosecutrix and the two boys, and his remarks were made toward the close of the direct examination of the boy who *284 testified last of the two. It is to be noted, therefore, as a preliminary to the examination of the testimony of the three, that if their statements contained any tiling tli'pt was worthy the attention of the jury, the remarks of the judge were such as completely to nullify the effect of those statements and to leave appellant’s defense on the facts to rest upon his own unsupported testimony, for we have already observed that the sole remaining witness testified as an expert.

Not much is to be said concerning the testimony of the prosecutrix when on the stand for appellant. Her examination was very brief. In fact, objection was made and sustained to the principal questions addressed to her and she was at once called from the stand. We must say, however, that there is nothing in the record to indicate that she was not called in good faith, and the questions put to her were consistent with the general line of defense adopted by appellant. They were objectionable only because they had been addressed to her before, on her cross-examination while on the stand as a witness for the people.

Upon the score of the materiality of the testimony of the two boys and the extent to which it contradicted the evidence brought forth by the prosecution, we are first pointed to the testimony of Smith. Speaking concerning the trip to the park in search of the prosecutrix and appellant, and testifying for the prosecution, that witness said, “when we met the two coming in the machine Lillian [the prosecutrix] jumped in the machine .and threw her arms around my neck and just simply collapsed.” A little later the witness said, “I held Lillian all the way into Santa Ana.” Smith’s testimony, and that of others, shows that on the ride to the park he and Cecil Park, one of the boys, occupied the rear seat, and Dewey Callahan, the other boy, sat in the front seat alone and drove the car. When appellant and the prosecutrix were taken up the latter got into the rear seat between Smith and Parks and appellant sat in front with Callahan. With this observation we turn to a part of the cross-examination of Smith: “Q. Now, what do you call ‘collapse’? A. Well, she was in a nervous condition and she wasn’t able hardly to walk, she was just simply prostrated. . . . Q. And as soon as she got in the car she did what? A. She fell into my *285 arms. . . . Q. Inside of the car? A. Yes. . . . Q. Did you have your arms out? A. Yes. Q. Ready for her to fall into your arms? A. I did. Q. And she didn’t sit down in the seat, did she? A. Yes. Q.

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Bluebook (online)
203 P. 440, 55 Cal. App. 280, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-caldwell-calctapp-1921.